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Preliminary Findings of Noncompliance with...
Journal article

Preliminary Findings of Noncompliance with Psychotropic Medication and Prevalence of Methamphetamine Intoxication Associated with Suicide Completion

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: A study of medical examiner records from suicide completers was designed to identify potential precipitating factors in the decision to commit suicide. METHODS: Forensic data has been collected for a subset of suicide victims in Utah who completed suicide between 1996 and 2002. RESULTS: Youth suicide completers appear to be undiagnosed for mental illness, or to be noncompliant with psychotropic medications. Along with treatment issues, alcohol and methamphetamine were the most common substances found in the blood and/or urine of suicide completers. CONCLUSIONS: Accurate diagnosis of mental illness, and improved compliance with psychotropic medications may play a critical role in suicide prevention. The prevalence of methamphetamine in suicide completers is unexpectedly high and requires further investigation.

Authors

Callor WB; Petersen E; Gray D; Grey T; Lamoreaux T; Bennett PJ

Journal

Crisis, Vol. 26, No. 2, pp. 78–84

Publisher

Hogrefe Publishing Group

Publication Date

March 1, 2005

DOI

10.1027/0227-5910.26.2.78

ISSN

0227-5910

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